Pergunta

When I execute the following code the output is "nullHelloWorld". How does Java treat null?

import java.util.*;
import java.lang.*;
import java.io.*;

/* Name of the class has to be "Main" only if the class is public. */
class Ideone
{
    public static void main (String[] args) throws java.lang.Exception
    {
        String str=null;
        str+="Hello World";
        System.out.println(str);
    }
}
Foi útil?

Solução

You are attempting to concatenate a value to null. This is governed by "String Conversion", which occurs when one operand is a String, and that is covered by the JLS, Section 5.1.11:

Now only reference values need to be considered:

  • If the reference is null, it is converted to the string "null" (four ASCII characters n, u, l, l).

Outras dicas

When you try to concat null through + operator, it is effectively replaced by a String containing "null".

A nice thing about this is, that this way you can avoid the NullPointerException, that you would otherwise get, if you explicitly called .toString() method on a null variable.

Java treats null as nothing, it is the default value of a String. It appears in your String output because you use += to add "Hello World" to str.

String str=null;
str+="Hello World";
System.out.println(str);

You are basically telling Java: give my str variable the type of String and assign it the value null; now add and assign (+=) the String "Hello World" to the variable str; now print out str

my two cent:

    String str = null;
    str = str.concat("Hello World"); // Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException

but

str += "Hello World";
System.out.println(str); // Hello World
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